Literary transmissions and the fate of a topic : the continental spa in post-1840 British, Russian and American writing
Around 1840 the Continental watering place took off as a destination of international appeal—and as a topic in an internationalizing print culture. My thesis, drawing on a broad range of theories of intertextuality, uses the case of the waters to model the farrago of transmissions, contacts and coll...
Main Author: | Morgan, B. D. |
---|---|
Published: |
University College London (University of London)
2014
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.634686 |
Similar Items
-
A shadow in the glass : the trauma of influence in contemporary British women's writing
by: Wozniak, Agata Urszula
Published: (2015) -
From whodunnits to literary fiction : the charting of an author's transition from crime writer to literary novelist
by: Joss, Morag
Published: (2013) -
Reading technologies, literary innovation, and a new fiction
by: Hucklesby, David
Published: (2016) -
Exploring literary impressionism : Conrad, Crane, James and Ford
by: Weavis, Daniel
Published: (2002) -
'A damned mob of scribbling women' : affective labour in British and American fiction, 1848-1915
by: Skaris, Katherine
Published: (2015)